CactusBoyScout t1_itlidga wrote
Reply to comment by NetQuarterLatte in Where Are the Free Housing Attorneys NYC Promised to Tenants Facing Eviction? - Hell Gate by LittleWind_
Wouldn’t making it easier to buy a home just result in higher purchasing prices as more people compete over the same number of available units?
lll_lll_lll t1_itlnaea wrote
Yes, this is exactly why college is so expensive right now. Guaranteed federal loans without any default option was supposed to make the barrier to entry easier, but instead just added a zero onto the cost.
NetQuarterLatte t1_itlsr3i wrote
>Yes, this is exactly why college is so expensive right now. Guaranteed federal loans without any default option was supposed to make the barrier to entry easier, but instead just added a zero onto the cost.
College has became more expensive because it's a cartel of trophy diplomas.
Unlike housing, the physical limitation of a classroom size should practically not exist anymore.
With the multiplicative benefits of technology, the same lecturer could be teaching a class of thousands of students.
But instead of costs going down, it has actually went up.
Classes that require physical presence (such as labs) can scale a lot too. They mostly sit empty, whereas they could have lab sessions every waking hour of the week, with of gains of scale reducing the costs of education.
The rising costs of textbooks is another blatant broken market problem. Printing textbooks should be as cheap as ever now.
lll_lll_lll t1_itmj6b2 wrote
You are describing things that should have a downward pressure on price, all else being equal. This makes no sense as an explanation to rising costs.
Do you not accept the idea that universal access to loans has increased demand?
NetQuarterLatte t1_itlklwm wrote
>Wouldn’t making it easier to buy a home just result in higher purchasing prices as more people compete over the same number of available units?
If a tenant moves away from a lease into their recently acquired unit, no.
Because the change in supply will be basically neutral.
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